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C HAPTER 1. Parties and Politics in America – An Overview American political parties are characterized by a number of contradictions: On the one hand:

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Presentation on theme: "C HAPTER 1. Parties and Politics in America – An Overview American political parties are characterized by a number of contradictions: On the one hand:"— Presentation transcript:

1 C HAPTER 1

2 Parties and Politics in America – An Overview American political parties are characterized by a number of contradictions: On the one hand:  Two-thirds of the electorate identify with either party  Political institutions are organized entirely around parties  Parties exert tremendous influence on governmental policy But on the other hand:  Most Americans think the two parties are not very different  Parties have few formal members, and are often understaffed  Parties are fragmented in power and disunited in policy

3 The Nature of Politics The essence of politics is power – the ability of one person to get another person to behave in a desired manner  Because people have different values, and because of scarcity of resources, politics inevitably involves conflict  In its most basic sense politics is about “who gets what, when, and how” (Lasswell 1936) Political conflict is resolved and managed through bargaining and compromise  Bargaining: the prolonged exchange of proposals and counterproposals  Compromise:a settlement in which each side concedes some of its preferences in order to secure others

4 The Nature of Party Scholars have suggested a variety of formal definitions of political party: Two contrasting definitions:  Burke (eighteenth century): “a body of men united, for promoting by their joint endeavors the national interest, upon some particular principle n which they are all agreed”  Epstein (twentieth century): “any group, however loosely organized, seeking to elect government officeholders under a given label” “any group, however loosely organized, seeking to elect government officeholders under a given label”

5 The Nature of Party Parties as tripartite social structures: 1.The party in the electorate: party voters and identifiers 2. The party organization: party officers, committees, staff, and workers 3.The party in government: governmental officeholders Brand names and economies of scale

6 The Tripartite Structure of American Political Parties Party in the Electorate (party voters and identifiers) Party in the Government (governmental officeholders) Party Organization (party officers, committees, staff, and workers) Source: “The three-part political party,” p. 12, from Party Politics in America, 8 th ed., by Paul Allen Beck. Copyright © 1997 by Addison-Wesley Educational Publishers, Inc. Reprinted by permission of Pearson Education, Inc.

7 The Functions of Parties Within the American political system parties perform the following functions: 1.Serving as intermediaries -linkage between the citizens and their government -aggregate scattered societal interests into policy

8 Figure 1.2. Political Parties as Intermediaries Political Parties Executive and Bureaucracy Legislature Courts THE GOVERNMENT Political Parties Mass Media Interest Groups The Public

9 The Functions of Parties Within the American political system parties perform the following functions: 1.Serving as intermediaries -linkage between the citizens and their government -aggregate scattered societal interests into policy 2.Nominating candidates -controls the voter’s range of choice -shift from party organization to the party in the electorate 3.Contesting elections and channeling the vote -mobilize the electorate in general elections -channel the electorate to either party’s candidate

10 The Functions of Parties 4.Organizing the government -provide division of labor, leadership, and rules -coordinate legislative-executive cooperation 5.Providing public accountability -enable voters to hold public officials accountable -enable voters to sort out the complexities of politics through the party label 6.Managing conflict -reconcile competing group demands -building broadly based coalitions

11 Parties as Competitors for Political Influence Parties must compete for political influence with other political actors, including  candidate organizations -raise funds independent of parties  campaign consultants -professional and skilled experts  interest groups -play an increasingly important role in funding candidates  the mass media -provide momentum by creating candidate images

12 Parties and Interest Groups – there is a difference! Interest groups engage in similar activities as political parties, but are inherently different  Parties run candidates under their own labels -assume responsibility for their candidates, while interest groups do not  Parties have broad issue concerns -interest groups often reflect and prioritize narrow interests  Parties prioritize controlling government personnel -interest groups are concerned with government policy  Parties are quasi-public organizations -interest groups are less regulated, private associations  Parties have a unique relationship to their clientele -parties are inclusive, while interest groups are exclusive

13 The State of Parties in the 21 st Century Some contradictory trends:  Parties have been a stable force throughout history  Americans expect a two-party electoral contest  Citizens increasingly fail to identify with either party


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